Hello Andrew,

You rail against Telstra, but where I am, there is zero choice. For
mobile coverage, there are a few Telstra black spots where Optus has
coverage, but far more of the reverse. I am cursing Telstra as there is
ADSL either side of me, by something like four kilometers at the
closest. My copper pair is about 1,000 meters to the base of a mobile
phone tower, where there is ISDN equipment, but not ADSL. It used to be
a very poor quality 11 plus kilometers to the nearest exchange, but now
straight to fiber at the base of the mobile phone tower.

Add to that that NBNCo is not due to pass here for quite some time, and
that my mobile looses signal every now and then, sometimes when dry, not
just wet foliage. When NBNCo take over the copper network, Telstra/Big
Pond will no longer do dial up, and I will be forced to go 3G (that is
the best the tower will support) on Big Pond. At least that way over
contract gigabytes will be speed shaped, rather than an extra ten
dollars for each over plan gigabyte that is the Telstra plan.

Think about what it will take to get a DVD .ISO, currently not possible
on my dial up. I am fortunate that I can visit a local friend with ADSL
now and then for some updates and .ISO images. Think about what it would
be like trying to cope with the Windows Updates pushed out without
warning.

I do not think much of Telstra, but that the other majors are even
worse.

Taking an on topic point, have you ever heard of being able to activate
a USB modem under Linux? I gather many, even most, can be used, after
activation, but the activation requires Windows, with a vague nod to
Apple. I have even seen trouble, quite a few years back, with a Windows
Netbook, one of the early ones that was also available with Linux. It
belonged to a German national who brought it with him, and he had
enormous trouble getting activation of anything. He even grabbed an
update or two on a USB stick, and still did not work.

As to reading any replies, that depends on the status of Telstra's modem
pool, whether they answer, and whether they will let me log in, then
whether the networking is functional. I suspect that there may be a
problem with resetting and being ready when a Windows user just drops
the line rather than logging out. However I have had it cut me off well
under the ten hours that any one session may run up to, the dropping the
connection happening from their end. They appear to not be looking after
in this last time window before dropping the service.

Regards,

Mark Trickett

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